i EVENTS OF THE DAY PREPARED FOR THE BUSY READEB tj I Sat! lof M [to r# *1 Jraii( ju tfio fia I'llKJtil * tr, < FO R STRONGER NAVY. 140 ONIONS TO HELP BEEF T R U S T IN DICTED. CHINESE ROUT LAMA. New J e r s e y G rand J u r y Calls Halt 8attleship to Cost SI8,OOO,0 0 0 —Sub­ On G reat Com bine. marines for Pacific. New York, Feb. 26.—The “ beef Washington, Feb. 28.— Secretary I trust’’ of the United States, embrac- Meyer, of the navy department, is j ' ing six great companies and 21 pack- said to have told the house naval j I ers, several of them multimillionaires, committee today of plans of building a I was indicted by a grand jury in Hud- ----------- son county, New Jersey, today, charg- world’s record-breaking battleship of I ed with conspiracy in limiting the sup- 32,000 tons displacement at a cost of RIISIMFSS LUmrLCLI fflM P I FI Y 1ILU TIFI1 Ur IIP ply The of indictments meat and poultry. $18,000,000 and making the United DUdlllLdD drawn under the law States the leading naval power. _______ of New Jersey, which provides upon | Members of the committee said that conviction, a maximum penalty o f : three years in the penitentiary, a $1,- T rouble H as Long Been E x p e c te d — the secretary’s radical plans were Philadephia Citizens, Alarm ed a t P r o s ­ Lass Important but Not Less Inter* 000 fine or both. The offense is extra- i C hinese G ov ernm ent D e te rm ­ favorably received by the committee. pects, U rg e Company to A rbi­ esting Happenings from Points ditable, which means practically that The secretary did not refer to naval ined to D isp erse Monks. tr a te —T w o Killed in Riot. the meat barons must successfully re­ Outside the State. strength in numbers of ships or arma­ sist extradition or come to Jersey City j ment, but to various features of im­ for trial. Calcutta, British India, Feb. 24.— Philadelphia, Feb. 28.—A fter a ses- ■ Pierce Garvin, public prosecutor of Live hogs reached $9.80 per hundred provement of the efficiency of ships Hudson county, said tonight that he Chinese troops today entered Lhassa, and guns. at Chicago. sion of more than six hours, the Cen- would forthwith notify the defendants the capital of Tibet, and the residence The building of the proposed giant tral Labor union delegates last night af their indictment and would be ready of the Dalai Lama, the supreme head Asquith is about to fall from power and his government faces ruin because battleship is delayed until next year j voted to call a sympathetic strike of j to enforce extradition in each case of the Lamaist hierarchy, who, upon only because the naval experiments | of his blunders. where the individual concerned is not the approach of the soldiers, fled with with 14-inch guns have not been com- H® trade unions in the organization, willing to face trial. The defendants several of his ministers into India. Pinchot charges that Ballinger wil- ]ete(i and the department desires to beginning next Saturday. The dele- 11.. deceived J«A.i!.nf1 President U.„aLlnnt T Slt W I th ' - - - - - Serious trouble has been expected, follow : fully know the result of full experiments, j gates assert that 125,000 men will re­ The National Packing company, owing to the action of the small Chi­ false statements. Tentatively, it is planned to arm the spond to the call. Armour & Co., Swift & Co., Morris nese army, which, marching from Sze- A French cardinal was fined for urg­ J great battleship with a battery of This action of the Central Labor & Co., Hammond Packing company, Chuen, China, subdued Eastern Tibet, ing the school authorities not to use I fourteen 14-inch guns of the latest Union is fraught with momentous con­ G. H. Hammond & Co., J. Ogden Ar­ levying contributions on the Lama’s the state text books. I type- The secretary said that plans for en­ sequences, the union officials say. The mour, A. Watson Armour, Louis F. home and showing no respect for the Secretary Meyer has plan for 32,000- largement of all the drydocks of the Swift, Edward^F. Swift, Charles H. monasteries. ton battleship, to cost $18,000,000, country, as outlined to the committee decision was made at a secret session Swift, Edward Morris, Ira N. Morris, The Tibetans, resenting the dese­ of 700 delegates in Labor Lyceum Hall, Arthur Meeker, Edward Tilden, L. A. cration of their holy places, petitioned and carry fourteen 14-inch rifles. some weeks ago, were made in contem- Nicaraguan rebels surprised the gov- plation of the great enlargement of the which lasted more than six hours. I Carter, Thomas E. E. Wilson, Thomas the Chinese foreign board, praying emment forces, killed their general, battleships and he wanted the docks There apparently was no question that J. Corners, F. A. Fowler, L. H. Hey- that the emperor of China interfere in ... ,, man, James E. Bathgate, Jr., George : the interest of the Buddhists. The pe­ and secured many prisoners and much built to accommodate ships of great the delegates would vote ’ a strike, the T » rw tition was disregarded, the Chinese booty. size. split being on whether or not the strike Hartell, Henry B. Darlington. A. A. propose to make the administration of It was tentatively agreed that the Maurice F. Egan, minister to Den­ would be started immediately. Fuller, L. C. Patterson. the country purely Chinese. mark, declares he will believe Dr. naval increase this year, based on the Ira N. Morris sent a lawyer to Jer­ The Dalai Lama appealed to Lord The more conservative element pre­ Cook honest until he is proven other­ secretary’s recommendations, shall be sey City this week from Chicago to Minto, the viceroy of India, but ,he re­ as follows: Two 27,000-ton battle- vailed, however, and the walkout was wise. ! ships, equipped either with 12 or 14- put off until next Saturday. Mean­ inform Prosecutor Garven that he had fused to interfere. retired from the directorate of Morris If the government wins against the ¡nch guns; one regular ship, two col- while, there is hope that the street & Co., but nevertheless he was in -! tobacco trust, it is j planned to attack tiers and five submarines. London, Feb. 24.—The flight from the United States Steel corporation The submarines are for the Pacific railway strike will be arbitrated, de­ dieted. Lhassa of the Dalai Lama will cause Cooper is the New Jersey manager next. coast, and are the first of a fast fleet spite the repeated declaration of the no surprise to close observers of the Roosevelt parted with his retinue of of these vessels which will be provided Transit Company, controlling all the for Swift & Co.; Bathgate, Edwards, Chinese attitude toward the Tibetan native servants and attendants at Con- in the next few years. The plan to lines in the city, that “ there is noth­ Bartwall, Darlington and Fuller are said people when he was in Pekin. to be officers and Eastern agents of the i It became evident then that the dokoro, Soudan, and the hunting ex­ place ten additional submarines on the ing to arbitrate.” Pacific coast next was considered fav­ Nobcdy doubts that last night’s a c -! Natio"al Packin? company, while other Chinese government had no intention pedition is ended. ;----- of f the Central t Labor union _ __i__ orably. tion makes I named are directors or officers or form­ of permitting him to reume his sway UnlesB the beef trust magnates who These submarines will be one of the the situation grave. There is a strong er directors or officers of the National at Lhassa, so far as civil power was have been indicted in New Jersey sur­ fastest yet launched, and will be cap- feeling, especially among business Packing company. Capiases for the concerned, and attempts were even render peaceably they will be extradit­ able of making a speed under water of men that the strike ought to be settled arrest of all the defendants will be is­ made to bar his passage on his return ed and the trust dissolved. sued immediately and the grand jury J 12 knots an hour. j speedily, as all lines of business suffer home. Great arrangements are being made A member of the committee said j f rom the interference with traffic. will resume its investigation next Following its policy of “ China for for Roosevelt’s reception in Rome. ; that the government had unofficial in-j Consequently there is much sympathy Wednesday. the Chinese,” the government determ­ The pope will grant him an audience formation to the effect that Japan is for the move for arbitration, made by ined to make more effective its control and the king will give a dinner in his laying the keels of two great battle­ clergymen of all denominations early 1 over the land of the Lamas. A cam­ A S B E S T O S c o m b i n e : ON. ships approaching the 32,000 ton in the week. honor. paign to this end has been pushed in There was surprise at the unanimity New T r u s t Will Be Capitalized at the border provinces for the last two A boyhood friend of Carnegie called limit. He said the tonnage of the years, and now China has sent an army on the steel king and had a long visit great battleship under consideration of the vote in favor of a general sym­ $5,000,000. of 25,000 anti-Buddhist troops into the with him, but when he intimated that would depend to a great extent upon pathetic strike. The meeting yester­ the weight of the batteries of the huge Denver, Feb. 26.—The Times today | capital of Tibet. day had been discussed previously he was having a hard struggle to make 14-inch guns, which would be placed and there was mixed sentiment as to B ays: Deals are now being organized This army, which was dispatched a living he received only some good pn this ship. the wisdom of calling out all classes of in Denver which will probably result from Sze-Chuen, has been drilled by pamphlets on economy, ___ in the formation of a trust that will Japanese officers and iB completely workmen. Leaders of various trades Charles E. Morgan, ex-governor of unions said they were opposed to a i control 90 per cent of the asbestos out- equipped with mountain and machine AVALANCHE BURIES 76 . Cuba, says that if the Monroe doc­ general strike because it involved bro- Pu* *be world, guns of German and Japanese patterns trine means anything the United ken trade agreements. Others doubted ! Officers and representatives of the and with wireless apparatus, to Be Town o f Mace, Idaho, Said States must see that the smaller gov­ their ability to order all workmen to Intern8tional Asbestos company, the ________________ S c e n e o f D esaster. ernments on the Weatern hemisphere lay down their tools and have the order National Asbestos company, the Wy- | S T R IK E R IO T S C O N T IN U E . are properly conducted. oming Consolidated Asbestos company Spokane, Wash., Feb. 28.—With a obeyed. As the gathering was secret, little 8nd United States Asbestos Mining roar that could be heard in Wallace, A member of the I. W. W. arrested _ ___ ________ ___ of an authoritative nature can be ^ Fiberizing company are here to con- Local Police Admit Defeat— S tate P o ­ five miles distant, , _ an ________ avalanche over- in the recent disturbances in Spokane, _ whelmed the town of Mace, Idaho, last learned of what transpired behind the ( ^er w'th the representatives of English \ lice Called Out. has been found guilty of conspiring. night, and 75 people are believed to be barred doors. That there was much and California capitalists regarding Philadelphia, Feb. 24.—Police offi­ With the strict injunction that he buried under tons of snow and debris, oratory is evident, as the meeting *be S8*e their properties to new in- cials of the city today virtually ac­ was not to be represented as favor­ Telephone messages from Wallace say lasted from a little after 2 o’clock un- terests. ing votes for women. President Taft that the slide occurred at 11:30 o’clock, j til 8 :30. Representatives of the Amalgamat- ! knowledged their inability to cope accepted an invitation to address the Rescue parties started at once from The great crowd gathered outside ed Asbestos ccorporation, a Canadian 1 with the st ike situation when a re­ opening session of the annual conven­ Wallace to the scene of the disaster, the hall would occasionally hear loud comPany, recently launched, which has quest as made of John C. Groome, su­ tion of the Woman Suffrage associa­ A special relief train was also started cheering, and a responsive cheer would °btained control of about 90 per cent perintendent of the state police, th at tion, to be held in Washington, April out from Spokane. go up from the outside. Finally when asbestos output of Canada, are J the 200 members of his command be 14. Because of the deep snow and block-1 the meeting broke up and the ar* investigating the properties of brought to this city for police duty. This request was made, notwith­ companies represented at the Den- A Canadian Pacific train was derail­ aded condition of the road from Wal- j nouncement was made that unless the standing that serious rioting was less ed on the brink of a 200-foot precipice, lace to Mace, no details of the catas - 1 Philadelphia Rapid Transit company ver conference and the consummation made an agreement with its striking deal will likely be followed frequent today than on any other day and only prevented from plunging over trophe have yet been received. Heavy snow has been falling in j employes by next Friday, the greatest the absorption of these companies since the strike of the streetcar men by a retaining wall. began last Saturday. The state police by * the Northern Idaho during the past week, strike in the history of Philadelphia “ ~ ‘ big Canadian corporation. “ L ittle Billy” McClintock, 6 years The new interests are said to have are expected to reach here tom now _ I and with the thaw which began yester­ will be inaugurated, there old, of Chicago, and heir to $6,000, offered $1,100.000 for the control of morning, and will doubtless be sent in­ day conditions were favorable for just cheer and the crowd dispersed. 000, will be asked to choose his own such a disaster which has overwhelmed to the Kensington district, where the Not only members of unions affilia- j the Wyoming asbestos deposits. State Fencibles had such an unpleasant guardian. the little town. ted with the Central Labor union and ' experience. the Allied Building Trades council, but The German government refuses Catch is 300,000 Pounds. For the first time the Rapid Transit moral or financial support to American Walla Walla, Wash., Feb. 28.—A those of every labor organization in I comPany succeeded in running its cars exhibitors of machinery at the coming special dispatch at 3 a. m. says that the city in any way connected with the | Vancouver, B. C., Feb, 26 • —The l n * ' until 6 o’clock on the Frankford line, halibut fishing steamer Kingfisher, exhibition a t Berlin next summer. five hundred rescuers have taken out American Federation of Labor, p a rtic -' belonging to the fleeet of the New which Penetrates thia unruly territory. ipated in the meeting. Great Britain will give refuge to the seven dead bodies while 26 men, wo­ Two separate meetings ■were held. England Fish company, an American I At that hour a11 car8 were «turned to deposed Dalai Lama, of Tibet, at Cal­ men and children were taken from the The delegates to the Central Labor concern, is due to arrive here Friday the barns. cutta, and has asked the Chinese gov­ slide alive, that occurred at Mace last Four policemen guarded each car, met on one floor of the with 300,000 pounds of fish, 200,000 of ernment for full explanation of the night. It is known that 100 additional union and detectives patrolled the route all bus- which *he cauRht in two and a half building, while the president and are dead. day in automobiles. Whenever a affair. The slide is half a mile long and 30 j iness agents of the other organizations f*a?.*'. Her whole time for the trip group of men fo> med detectives rushed “* ^ut n,ne and 8 half days. The Six persona were killed in a snow- feet deep. The first train bearing the met on the next floor. Declaring the car strike here had R,nKfisher s total cargo will be 400,000 them and even followed the ringleaders slide in the Bitter Root mountain^ in 25 injured left Mace for Wallace at become a battle between capital and po’Jrr S’ >n5*udes we'f?ht for ice into houses until they had captured Montana. 2:25 a. m. ! labor, the members of the Central La- and hoxes ln which some of the fish them. In spite of the vigilance of the Additional rescuers are being sent to A hotel at Haselton, B. C., burned police, many car windows were bro­ are packed. while the thermometer was a t 16 de the scene on a train now being made bor union unanimously adopted a reso- ken, and the company was finally | lution that every union man and woman greea below xero. Many of the occu- up here. obliged to use sheet iron windows in Warning from Gompers. J stop work on next Saturday if, in the pants were forced to leap from upper place of glass panes. | meantime, the striking carmen have Washington, Feb. 26.—Samuel Gom­ windows clad only in their night cloth- "C orpse" Comes to Life. | not reached an agreement with the pers, president of the American Feder Rush Line is Dispersed Brookville, Ind., Feb, 28.—Popular company. ation of Labor, told Attorney General Los Angeles, Feb. 24. — Senator New Jersev grand jury will return misconception of the coroner’s law Wickersham today that if the preeent at least 15 indictments against pack- nearly permitted the body of Miss American workers’ movement, which Frank P. Flint today sent a telegram Weston Ahead of Time. the weary ones who are still main­ ing houses for storing tood products Olive Sanders to be frozen in a snow- Albuquerque, N. M., Mar. 1.—Leav­ he said is constructive and conserva­ to contrary to law. bank today. Miss Sanders’ sister ing McCarty’s station at 6 o’clock this tive in character, is outlawed and taining the line in this city, hoping to be the first to file on the Yuma lands, missed Olive from the house and found The czar of Russia would build a her, seemingly dead, lying in the snow morning. Edward Payson Westdh ar- flushed outof existence by untavora- informing them that the order of Sec­ rived late tonight at Sandia, a way sta- b e legislation tnd court decisions, it new trans-Mongolian railway In pre­ in the barnyard. I t took two hours to retary Ballinger will stand. * The see- — v u by i / j another aj i uui f r iiiu vem en v __ j .. movement ference to neutral lx ing the present get the coroner, ami the body lay tion 22 miles from Albuquerque, hav- will be followed .n d,gr“Pted the line and ing walked 60 miles today. Here he that will scarcely be constructive. For line. where it was found. He “ viewed” will spend the night, and leaving there two hours Mr. Gompers and Mr. Wick- homeseekers to take their A Cambridge. Maaa., bank book- the body and it was carried into the at midnight, will reach Albuquerque ersham discussed legislation affecting „ nrn *®. " , a *™nd ru*h” on the keepor who received $12 per week sal- house. The undertaker was called to j next morning at 8 o’clock. He will be labor. * morning of March 1. Those in line ary ia accused of embetxling $144,000. prepare it for burial. At this stage four days ahead of his schedule on ar- ----------------------- “ «"*»«» they will “ hang on” until the lasL From 210 the line haa dwind- Riotera In Philadelphia Street car Miss Sanders revived. ; rival here. To date Weston has aver- Declares for General Strike. led to 156. strike Inateh guna from soldiers. [ aged 40 miles daily and the long climb Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 26.—Follow-1 Butte Strike May Soon End. 5 of the continental divide is now behind 'An earthqualTe'shock, causing dishes ing the publication of a statement al­ Girl Parades Long as Boy Butte. MonL. Feb. 28.—A settle­ I him. and Windows to rattle violently, was leged to have been made today by John * * ^ ^ i d* Jty-, Feb. 24.—Miss Golds ment of the strike of mine engineers felt in Wstertown, N. Y. J. Murphy, president of the Central ie Cantrill, 17 years old, oia, today war 20 Families Burned Out. is expected soon. Mat Commerford, Labor union, a warrant was issued for The Ministerial aeeociation of V it­ president of the International Steam New York, Mar. 1.—Twenty famil­ bis a rre st It ia said that Murphy de­ •ent home by the school trustees afte- toria, B. C., haa joined the Central Engineers’ union, tonight stated that ies in Jersey City were burned out to­ clared " a general strike should be the! learned that .be had been attend­ Tradee and Lebor council. he had submitted a proposition to end night in a fire which destroyed 10 called immediately. I think it ia in­ ing school aa Sam Murray, dressed in A special eommlttee is investigatlng the trouble to the officials of the Butte double dwelling houses and raxed the evitable. There are men in the Nortk- boys clothing. She stood second in class. Several Miners union, which proposition he ex­ plant of the New York Veneer Seating seat who ean shoot as straight a . any oer ■go chartea th a t the university of earned her li>i£™i* pected they would accept. | company. The damage is $200,000. s i i is tspehh% swcUlism. trooper that ever drew a breath. ’ la “ newsAoy” oc traina. Newsy Items Gathered from All Parts of the World. ì PLANS Sympathetic Strike Will In­ volve 125,000 Workers. Grand Head of Tibetan Monks Fiees to India. SACRED CITY OF LHASSA TAKEN t >